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A Free Man of Color - Barbara Hambly [68]

By Root 489 0
and January caught Lieutenant Shaw’s name. Both men laughed. The sergeant jerked his head toward the massive oak door that led to the Cabildo’s inner court. January’s papers stayed where they were on his desk.

The central courtyard of the old Spanish city hall ran back almost as far as Exchange Alley, flagged with the heavy granite blocks brought as ballast by oceangoing ships and surrounded on two sides by galleries onto which looked the cells. As the guardsmen led January to the stairway that ascended to the first of these galleries, they passed a sturdy, stocklike construction of stained and scarred gray wood, and January realized with a queasy contraction of his stomach that this was the city whipping post.

No, he thought, quite calmly, pushing all possibility from his mind that his own neck might feel that rubbed tightness, his own arms and ankles be locked into those dirty slots. No. They don’t just keep people here indefinitely. Someone will send for Livia or Dominique. In any case nothing will be done without a hearing.

The knot of ice behind his breastbone did not melt.

The plastered walls of the cell looked like they had been whitewashed sometime around the Declaration of American Independence, at which time the straw in the mattresses of the cots had probably been changed, though January wouldn’t have staked any large sum on it. Both cots were already occupied, one by an enormously fat black man with hands even bigger than January’s—although January suspected that spanning an octave and a half on the piano was not what he did with his—the other by a scar-faced mulatto who sized January up speculatively with cold gray-green eyes, then turned his face away with an almost perceptible shrug. Another mulatto, elderly and gray-haired and incoherent with drink, was fumbling around trying to reach the bucket in the corner in time to vomit. Three other men, two black and one white, were seated on the floor. Roaches the length of January’s thumb scampered over the sleeper and in and out of mattresses, bucket, and the cracks in the walls.

“You heave in that bucket, Pop,” said the mulatto on the bed, “or I’ll make you lick it up.”

The old man collapsed back against the wall and began to cry. “I di’n’ mean it,” he said softly. “I di’n’ mean nuthin’. I di’n’ know them clothes belonged to nobody, settin’ out on the fence that way. I thought some lady throwed ’em away, I swear—”

“—said I was impudent. What the hell ‘impudent’ mean?”

“It mean twenty-five lashes, is what it mean—or thirty if you ‘drunk an’ impudent.’ ”

No, thought January, putting aside the dread that had begun to grow like a tumor inside him. Not without seeing a judge. It won’t happen. His palms felt damp, and he wiped them on torn and dirty trousers.

The white man spat. Daubs and squiggles of expectorated tobacco juice covered the wall opposite him and the floor beneath. The sweetish, greasy stench of it rivaled the smell of the bucket.

From beyond the strapwork iron of the door, muffled by the space of the court or the length of the gallery, women’s voices rose, shrilly arguing. From further off came a scream from the cells where they kept the insane: “But they did all conspire against me! The king, and President Jackson, they paid off my parents and my schoolmasters and the mayor to ruin me.…”

A guard cursed.

The light in the yard faded. Voices could be heard as the work gangs were brought in from cleaning the city’s gutters or mending the levees, a soft shush of clothing and the clink of iron chain. The splash of water as someone washed in the basin of the courtyard pump. The cell began to grow dark.

Half an hour later Nahum Shagrue was dragged along the gallery, stumbling, head down, fresh blood trickling from a scalp wound he hadn’t had when he’d been brought into the duty room. Mercifully, he was locked in another cell.

About the time music started up in Rue Saint Pierre below the narrow windows in the cell’s opposite wall, a youth came along the gallery carrying wooden bowls of beans and rice, gritty and flavorless, and a jug of water.

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